Best practices: add tasks to REQ/RITM ad hoc?

JP-ODU
Tera Guru

A team has been working on a workflow and catalog item to standardize their process, but the emerging need has been the ability to sometimes add non-standard tasks, not already covered in the workflow. They'd ideally like these new ad hoc tasks to fall into the existing workflow and relate back to the relevant RITM/REQ. 

So, my question is: is that possible? What's the best means of accomplishing it?

1) one solution I found, here: https://community.servicenow.com/community?id=community_question&sys_id=7fc5c721db1cdbc01dcaf3231f96..., seems to be a adding a generic request catalog item but that won't satisfy the request that the task be related back to the original request, it generates a new one

2) I'm curious about perhaps adding a role that has ACL write permission to the task table, thus permitting users to add tasks under the RITM, and thus it'll relate to the RITM and back to the REQ? Does anyone have experience with this approach?

5 REPLIES 5

Gaurav Shirsat
Mega Sage

Hi JD ODU

  • I'd relate this to an Amazon shopping experience.
  • The request is your Amazon order. It has an order number, your payment info, your shipping info and other information related to your overall order.
  • The items are your individual items in your Amazon order. For example, if you ordered 2 books, a monitor and a mouse, those are your items as part of your order.
  • Each item probably has its own workflow. Some ship from amazon, some ship from other suppliers. These would be the tasks for the items and make up the workflow for each item.
  • As the customer (or end user) i care about the request and how it pertains to my items. My request (Amazon order # 123456789) tells me what I ordered, my order status for each of my items and how far along I am. The end user gets this exact same view in Service Now. If I go in through self service and check the status of a Request, I can see, graphically, the status of my items under my request (the stages of these items are determined by the workflows for the items).
  • The request can handle maybe an overall approval process if needed (for instance, using the OOB example for approvals on orders over $1000). The items have their own workflows that are required to get the item from ordering through fulfillment. The tasks make up the individual work to complete those workflows.

also refer the below scenario

https://community.servicenow.com/community?id=community_question&sys_id=213d87a9db9cdbc01dcaf3231f96...

also check the Video

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19RpDrjez30

 

Please Mark Correct and Helpful

Thanks and Regards

Gaurav Shirsat